'Facebook, Twitter ads don’t deliver'

Published Apr 15, 2014

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San Francisco - Priceline Group spends feverishly on Google advertisements to grab users searching for a hotel in New York or Paris -- and because ads on Facebook and Twitter have failed to deliver results, chief executive Darren Huston said.

“For Facebook and Twitter, we have endless amounts of money,” Huston said yesterday in an interview at Bloomberg’s New York headquarters.

“But we haven’t found anything there.”

The comments by the chief of one of the biggest spenders on online advertising are set to stoke debate over which forms of digital marketing are most effective.

Facebook and Twitter have grappled with questions of whether their social media ads provide a substantial return on investment for marketers, particularly at travel and e-commerce companies.

Priceline’s online marketing costs surged 41 percent last year to $1.8 billion, outpacing sales growth of 29 percent.

Online travel agents need consumers to book through their sites to generate revenue, and Google, as the best source for delivering that traffic, eats up about 90 percent of Priceline’s digital ad spending, according to Mark Mahaney, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets in San Francisco, who has the equivalent of a buy rating on the stock.

 

Search, Social

 

Google’s search ads are based on keywords and often capture consumers looking for a specific vacation or hotel, thus leading to reservations.

While Facebook and Twitter social ads can help companies communicate with their fans and can be used to target individuals based on characteristics like location and who they follow, they haven’t resulted in significant bookings for Norwalk, Connecticut-based Priceline, Huston said.

He is seeking to diversify the company’s ad spending, tapping review site TripAdvisor, its own Kayak travel search engine and search site Trivago.

“You never want to be overly reliant,” said Huston.

“But Google has been a great thing.”

He declined to say if spending on Google is decreasing as a percentage of the company’s ad budget.

Jim Prosser, a spokesman at Twitter, declined to comment, citing the company’s quiet period ahead of earnings later this month. Winnie King, a spokesman for Google, also declined to comment.

Adam Isserlis, a spokesman for Facebook, didn’t have an immediate comment.

 

Going Mobile

 

Huston, 48, took over as chief executive on January 1, replacing Jeffery Boyd, who generated a 100-fold increase in Priceline shares during an 11-year run.

Huston, a former Microsoft Corp. executive, joined Priceline in 2011 as head of the company’s Amsterdam-based Booking.com unit, which accounts for the bulk of its revenue.

Priceline is also investing in mobile as more consumers book last-minute travel from smartphones and as users opt for tablets over personal computers.

Mobile bookings at Booking.com increased to $8 billion last year from $3 billion in 2012 and $1 billion in 2011, Huston said.

Even as Google attracts more of Priceline’s ad dollars, the search engine is becoming a bigger competitor.

The Mountain View, California-based company owns online flight service ITA Software, has a service called Hotel Finder that scans prices from numerous online travel agents, and last week said that it’s licensing hotel-booking software from startup Room 77 Inc. Huston said he isn’t concerned.

“Google of course respects us as an advertiser,” said Huston, whose company accounts for about 3 percent of Google’s ad revenue.

“They’d like to get more of my money.” - Bloomberg News

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